April 2001 Part 3. A quick in and out of Northern Queensland.

I’m now zooting along on the Qantas from Cairns to Singapore, via Darwin -the return of what I did the other night. Fortunately this one is on time. In Darwin, one of the world’s least inspiring cities, in case you were wondering – a sweaty place at the best of times and it never seems actually to HAVE a best of times, they made us all get off. A sort of hangover from the olden days of planes when refueling was regarded really as being close to playing with fire – thus the time wasting exodus from the plane and reboarding again later. You do not want to incinerate your paying pax should something go wrong. Instead we get the opportunity to go SHOPPING and the chance to pick up our last boomerang or other ethnic offering. Was amused by watching one elderly, I should think Nordic, couple, doing vigorous exercises to prevent blood clots. He looked younger than her by a chunk and was egging her on something terrible, so that I should think she was more at risk of a heart attack there and then. Finally they did power walking around the Japanese tourists, just to get in the way.

We had managed to bring our plane into Cairns a few days before, without too much fuss, though of course the foot and mouth business in the UK has made the Australians even more paranoid than ever about what comes in to the country. They have always been very protectionist of their agriculture (and rightly so) but now they are positively on a mission and there is a zeal in their eyes. They wanted to know exactly where I had been for the last few months, so I gave them a much sanitized version or I would probably be still under investigation or put into a large plastic bag for the duration. What they didn’t know was, in this case, a much better idea. Goodness knows what happens if you say that on live on a farm in Devon – the floor probably opens and you plunge down into a vat of some delousing fluid.

The scenery in North Queensland is just fabulous and the drive from Cairns north to Port Douglas, where our posh hotel is, is a knockout. First through acres of sugar cane (not the place to go walkabout though, as I heard nasty stories of the migrant cane cutters of old, who were much done in from diseases caused by rat’s urine …) – anyway, the road then follows the coast, with hidden, mini beaches, fringed with a few palms and the hugeness of the Pacific to your right – it is really beautiful.

The hotel people seemed to be happy to see me back (I was there to scout it out last year) and my room was full of goodies of both the liquid and solid variety, so I wanted for nothing. Our local agent turned up too – very much the ” No Worries, mate” Australian and we went over the program and made sure we were all talking the same language – even though Seattle has everything under control with them, you still need to go back to square one and clarify absolutely everything, cos at our end of the market, we cannot afford any misunderstandings. It’s amazing how easy it can be to just ‘presume’ that we are all talking the same language and then find out the hard way that we were not !! That is what our punters pay the big bucks for, but unfortunately what I am NOT paid the big bucks for !!! – though I do have some of my more regular customers willing to lobby TC on my behalf and say that I beyond rubies, (though just who this Ruby is, I’m never quite sure…). Sounds like a good name for a bar – see you at Beyond Rubies.

Take a break here ….  Lots more to come.

April 2001 Part 2. A long night, a Singapore Sling and another long night.

OK now in Singapore waiting for Mr Qantas to show up – the flight is 4 hours late – not a nice idea as this means we shall leave at 0230, which is way past my bedtime. And I spent last night on a plane too, chez Singapore Airlines, Dubai to Singapore. After Iran Aseman, I was in a different world ! The flight left at 2200 and after 8 hrs was due into SIN at 0700 local, so I swallowed a good knock out pill and waived them all goodnight. It was empty enough for me to move seats and not have anyone else breathing in my ears, so despite repeated offers from the crew to sample their fine dining, I was out like a light for the whole flight.

Singapore in the dawn was steamy as usual. I hopped a taxi to Raffles, as I now have a good contact their ex Cambodia, so he was waiting and put me right into their health spa for much freshening up, which is always a reviver. Did an official tour of the hotel, which has been much tarted up since I was last through its portals. I am returning twice there within the next 10 days and will be given a posh suite of my choosing – I DO LIKE having friends in fancy watering places….

Of course they would love our business should we ever decide to drop in. Had a good massage later and a drink in the celebrated Long Bar, home of the Singapore Sling which tried and decided was a terrible waste of good gin – they serve about 1000 a day – yes 1000. Every tourist who comes to SIN has to make a pilgrimage to Raffles. I sat in the lobby for a while (having a slight attack of the terminal exhaustion) and now must feature in many Japanese tourists photos – I tried to adopt an interesting pose and not look like a derilict, mouth agape, between flights.

OK now many hours later, somewhere over the North of Oz. Qantas was not having a good night in Singapore, as this plane coming in late, with many pax connecting to London on their flt from Sydney made them delay the London-bound one too, which was not a popular decision with the Singapore joiners. One poor Brit, my vintage, actually was in tears in the lounge as he was now going to miss some wedding – Qantas Duty Manager girl was v v sympathetic and certainly tried to do what little she could and he was at least nice with her and at one point I thought they were BOTH going to weep together – stiff upper lip Brit in tears, with much blowing of nose and coming to terms with a no win situation was our entertainment.

Lounge run by a very camp Singaporean BA guy, who made effusive p.a.’s and I think had we taken a vote, he would have been taken outside and pushed off the roof.

So eventualee, we were put on our plane, an exceedingly old 747 of the original vintage, which had been delayed waiting for a radio spare to come up from Sydney to Cairns on its northbound flight. Of course the luck was still against us, as no less than 5 pax managed not to board, which seemed almost impossible as the airport was virtually empty, but also BIG, so if they were asleep in a corner, they may not have been seen – so of course we had to have their bags removed. Oy oy oy. Finally we bumped up through some vast thunder clouds and I threw a blanket over myself and put the earplugs in and dozed off. 4 hours later we bumped our way back through the clouds and landed in Darwin in pouring rain – absolutely galloning down it was. “To speed things up here” he said, “passengers going through to Cairns should stay on board and we shall be here for 50 mins”. The reality was that we were there for 90 mins as yet again someone failed to board …. And also there was a vast amount of static coming through the p.a. system for some unknown reason, which was driving us all crazy. It’s turning into a night, or rather now, a day, that will never end. Just hope our cheerful Oz agents will be there to meet me and haven’t be sitting at the airport for hours and hours. Qantas crews need a great shake up – they are just going through the motions here – my Singapore girlfriends would be shocked rigid.

So I’m sending this one down the line from Cairns …. I know u are all breathlessly awaiting the next episode …. there will be more Oz stuff plus my visit to Sandakan in the Malaysian part of Borneo ( Vera, go get the map). Stay tuned to this channel and we shall be right back….

Hope u are all well ( and at least not as inside out as I am ….)

Tim

April 2001. Part 1. New Year in Iran and goldfish take to the air.

Hi Readers, from Dubai – back in civilization, after some days in the wilderness aka Iran.   We have now successfully navigated all the political and geographical twists and turns for having a B757, filled to the brim with American uber-millionaires, who were very warmly welcomed to a country whose capital city has whole buildings proclaiming DEATH TO AMERICA etc etc.

Imagine if you can, checking in with Iran Aseman Airlines at Isfahan with a 32kg suitcase and being asked ” Is that all ?”

Imagine asking for an aisle seat on the emergency exit and being told ” That’s a good idea …”

Imagine a B727 with a picture of Ayatollah Khomenei on the front bulkhead, staring down the cabin at everyone and looking totally constipated, just daring you to even think about having a good time.

Imagine a preflight p.a. invoking the will of Allah, inshallering you about even getting off the ground here, let alone flying and actually landing at the other end.

Imagine being seated in your emergency exit aisle seat, with a young guy sitting in the window seat, who starts to talk and confesses that he doesn’t like flying and therefore as there is no one in the middle seat, he will move into that so that we can be elbow to elbow and leave the window seat empty. So I suggest that HE sit on the aisle and I will take the window, which is done and then a young girl boards with a glass bowl full of goldfish (I’m not making this up) and the steward thinks she should sit with this on the emergency exit, so he moves over next to me and we are now happily squashed, with me up against the window, which is just what I was trying to avoid.

Then Iranian/Islamic sensitivities come into play and it’s not nice for a young woman, looking like a nun in training, to be up against two guys, cos who knows what un-Islamic ideas they may have (and in front of the all-seeing eyes of a dozen goldfish no less…) so she is seat swapped with a guy two rows ahead, so exit the goldfish, who are so crowded that they are likely to be belly up before we reach Dubai and our new friend arrives and proceeds to chatter too loudly in Farsi (not one of the romance languages of the world) in the middle seat for the whole one hour to Dubai.

Well, if you got all that, your imagination is quite good.

In Dubai, flights such as these arrive at a separate terminal on the other side of the runway, as I think the sight of 100 Iranians (plus moi, as the sole gringo) may be too much of an excitement for the regular pax and lead to tears before bedtime. Even the immigration guy who admitted me didn’t quite believe that I had actually arrived with this motley gang, many of whom would have done v well in a lookalike competition for Long John Silver – they have a piratanical look about them.

Goldfish are v much part of the Iranian New Year, which in case you have forgotten, is about to be celebrated – (year 1380 for those of you who like statistics). They are bought and exchanged and generally given a short life, mainly I should think due to lack of 02, in the N Y period, along with small pots of sprouting grass seeds. All supposed to remind you of new beginnings in life (though in the case of the goldfish, there are new endings coming too…) There is a p.r campaign afoot to have people release them in ponds, once they have had enuf of being reminded of new life and basically want to sink back into their old ways. This may be good news for goldfish.

Iran was abuzz with New Year festivities (well it’s about as festive as you can get on a diet of gallons of tea), which means firecrackers at night, some of the severe detonation type and two nights ago there was much ado with fires which people were leaping across in order to purify themselves.  It’s one of the rituals.

The way from the airport is also frequently blocked by masses of cars going out to welcome returnees from the Haj. This is the most important thing to happen in many people’s lives and therefore has to be recognized by everyone they know deciding to go to the airport to welcome them home. It’s total chaos. I had seen cars with much bilious green bunting and had thought it some wedding sorta thing but discovered that of course it is the green of Islam, so we all piles into the car, from toothless grandma down to the youngest infant, plus HUGE bunches of flowers and head for the airport. There was an Iran Air 747 coming in, which shall we say can seat plus/minus 350, so if you multiply that by probably 10 people coming to meet you, all armed with bunches of flowers, then you can begin only faintly to imagine the scene. Fortunately, there is always a separate Haj terminal, so this ordeal does not have to impinge on the usual sober and dull side the airport activity. But of course Idda loved to go see it all first hand.

In fact, Iran is just a whole mass of sober and dull stuff. No one looks like they are having an even halfway good time. And it doesn’t really look like they miss it too much. We must look a complete gang of libertines. Only concession to our lifestyle is with the guys, all of whom are much into sticky and powerful colognes, applied liberally. When it comes time for the ritual male/male 3 kiss goodbye, if you get hugged by many in succession, then you take on an aroma totally unique….

One little ps. This was the second time I had met flying goldfish. Flying from Calcutta to Dhaka, many years before, with my good friend Carolyn, a young Indian girl boarded the aircraft with a small but real fish tank with many confused occupants. The only trouble was in mid-flight, where it was lodged on the floor at her feet, she managed to knock it over. All of us around were looking under our seats for leaping fish and the cabin crew came with pots of water from the galley to refill the tank. Who says flying is boring ?

This is already too long …more to come.

Part two. Off to the east. Myanmar, one of my very top countries. Ki Ki, the giggler, walks me around.

The last 48 hours, I just had get used to running on fumes. Especially when the nice day out to Mandalay meant leaving the lovely Trader’s Hotel at 0530 and on a plane at 0645… why break the habits of a lifetime ???

And so we did. And it was good. But I was so knackered I hardly knew where I was. Ki Ki, my sweet and giggly minder, did everything. “Mr Tim, you wait here, I will come back”. And she did, every time. We flew on a new carrier for me, Yangon Air. As there are a whole slew of local flights leaving in the dawn, not only did we have boarding cards but colored stickers on our lapels so that we would not be carried off to the wrong place. Boardings were accomplished by a man with a flight numbered sign board wandering around yelling. Seemed to work. Everyone was boarded through one doorway, in the dimly lit dark and just to make it become more fun, the ‘bags’ went out that door too, so it was a rugger scrum plus many oddly shaped boxes and packages. Wonder of BA would like to try this in LHR ??

Plane was an ATR, which is v much the workhorse of the east. Two cute girls in silk outfits warmly welcomed us and off we went. We were given snack boxes containing two sweet buns for the 75 minute flight to Bagan (where I shall be off to with our punters later on) and I in turn presented the girls with some miniature wings from good old World Airways, which they thought better than rubies, esp as they did not sport wings themselves – they donned them immediately. The two flight deck guys were there too, so I gave them tie pins, which quite overwhelmed them so much that I was invited to sit on the flight desk for the 20 minute hop to Mandalay. Only one small technicality there was the fold down jumpseat had such a short seat belt that the ends would not meet across my thighs let along around my middle, which I thought, in my artless Japanese way, would mean that I couldn’t stay, but the guys just shrugged their shoulders and off we jolly well went, with me hanging on for dear life !!! I made sure I was braced for the landing as I am sure questions would have been asked had we arrived with a bump and I had been ejected through the flight deck window. Ah me, so nice to be back in this sort of place….

Mandalay Airport is all brand new .. just quite WHY they decided that they needed a vast establishment complete with double jetways, when all the local planes that arrive are small, is slightly beyond my ken .. they are def. thinking big, though I should think that when something does turn up which could use the said jetway, they will have lost the key at least. Acres of polished marble inside too. I suspect the Chinese are involved as this looks just like a new Chinese airport. Anyway, we flash the passport at immigration (yes Vera, I know we are still in Myanmar, but they are so paranoid that everyone goes through immigration all the time everywhere – fortunately no forms to be completed though) and there is a man and a car and driver and I discover that we are a whole HOUR away from Mandalay, rather than practically at the end of the main street where the old airport used to be – such is progress. And it is only 0830 and I feel shattered and would like nothing better than a cool dark room and a BED.

But instead we are off to do all Mandalay in one day and for good measure a couple of hotel inspections too, so nice cool rooms and beds are dangled in front of me on a so near yet so far basis. We examined all that Mandalay had to offer and were nicely lunched in an open air restau, sitting under vines which reminded me much of Uzbekistan and had some delish food with vast fresh-river prawns and other goodies. Myanmar cuisine is not something to get too excited about, with curries being much in evidence, but the trouble is that they seem to only waft a bit of the spices over the top, so could be fed to children and infants with no problem. Unlike Bangkok last night, where I had a wonderful chicken green curry that nearly removed my teeth fillings, as my mouth was smouldering…. Anyway we ran around in the heat and looked and were suitably impressed, but sadly there is not a lot of ‘there’, there. Mandalay is one of those places where its name is the best thing and the reality is a bit of a let down. Then back out to the airport and back on the same plane and route and having left in the cool of the dawn at 0530, I was home at 2130, feeling like I had been somewhat abused and there ortta be Geneva conventions about trying to impress people too much.

NOW days and days later as not a chance to put finger to keyboard while in Myanmar once the group showed up. We have the most wonderful agents there whom I wish could be everywhere, as their efficiency is staggering and they are all just so sweetly willing and would carry me and anyone else around on their backs if we gave the slightest hint of that being needed. They THINK. It is def. run by a guy with big connections (Ki Ki let slip that his father was a BIG General, which may account for his powers) but he is only in his early 30’s and is the entrepreneurial type, so has fingers everywhere. I had Ki Ki and a car and driver at all times and the nice thing was that they really knew what they were doing so it was almost a vacation for me.

I just love Yangon (or Rangoon as it was) even though it is one of the world’s most dilapidated cities. It has huge tacky charm no less and the old buildings are painted pretty pastels, in blue and yellow mainly. Everything is basically falling apart. ALL human life is there but not to a squalid degree or anything off-putting, but just a very reduced lifestyle compared to the west but the locals don’t look like they are suffering unduly. Though commuting to work on the back of a truck, with inward facing wooden plank seats, which would seat say 10 of each side but actually have 20 of them and then about another 25 crushed in standing and another 10 or so hanging on the back for dear life, now That’s a busload !

Best place to visit (and this is absolutely at the top of my list of “I don’t mind how many times I go there” is the Shwedagon Pagoda. An enormous (and I mean ENORMOUS) Buddhist shrine, it looks like the world’s largest golden handbell. You can see it from anywhere in town. It is set high on a solid platform, so having removed shoes and socks if worn (you can only visit barefoot), you can take an elevator or better, walk up one of the four broad staircases, which have masses of stalls either side to make sure you will both have offerings for above and also much to take home to show everyone. These will also be considered ‘auspicious’. We are greatly in to that, so astrological signs etc are factored in to daily life in a big way. Having arrived on the main floor, which runs all the way around the base of the stupa, there are hundreds of small Buddhist shrines in all directions. This is the WHQ of an eastern condition known as being ‘Buddhared out’. It would be impossible to count how many there are, but will certainly go in to the thousands. Everything from a few inches to the size of a house. The color is overwhelming. Between that and the heat, it is all coming at your. In the hot weather, there are mats to walk on as the marble becomes just burning hot. And you only walk around the whole site clockwise…. that’s auspicious. Families come to spend the day there and park themselves in the shade, bringing vegetarian food and water. And there are seven special shrines for the day of the week you were born on. I found Sunday and joined other Sunday-persons pouring water over a small Buddha. I am thinking that if it will help, then why not?

Over the years, I have spent a lot of time there, just sitting on the base of a Buddha statue and watching the world go by. Although I am not religious in any way, there is definitely a spiritual feeling that comes over me there, which is a wonderful sensation. If you can be there at full moon.. yes, you guessed it, this is the MOST AUSPICIOUS time and it is a lot more crowded, but never enough to become uncomfortable. And at night, the vast stupa is well lit and stretches up in to the black sky and the ‘flag’ on the top glitters with all the semi-precious stones fitted to it. I have to admit, it is borderline Disney, but that is insulting. This is for real.

Part 1. Off again to the east. UA takes me there, via Narita. It never stops being a very long way.

So here we are, readers, in January 2002, just over halfway to Tokyo and still over Amurrica (well just about to leave the v top of Alaska) and do a slight left hand turn and down the other side … always think this bit goes faster mentally, as it must be downhill….

Feel fine thank you … eating and drinking in moderation…. had the Japanese Bento Box lunch which I always like, as it comes from some posh Jap restau in NY and is certainly not attempted by UA caterers. All sortsa funny looking things which probably died unnatural deaths and now reposing in small china dishes and then some nice teriyaki salmon and small bottle of warm sake, which I am liking much and always forgetting to bring back. My chopsticks skills are good (mainly due to the v first time I went to China, in 1978, we had chopsticks for 3 weeks straight and no sign of a knife and fork, so it was sink or swim (or starve). So now I can still pick up small wet marbles and even tofu, which is prone to break up on a fork, let alone on two bits of twig. I had lunch many times in Chengdu airport with the Chinese agents, after our visits to Tibet and their real specialty there was burn your lips off tofu and I could pick it up without drama and they were impressed every time. Like riding a bike, you don’t forget.

My United Airlines mate Chief Purser Valerie is here – looks fabulous for a 58 yr old woman who has been flying since she was 21 .. threw her arms around me in the doorway, when I was almost the last to board (as refuse to shuffle along in line) and she was having a panic that I was a no-show. She did NOT offer me one of the at least 10 empty seats in F, but I am doing OK as have the aisle of a three in Biz and a comatose Japanese on the other side, so we are all peaceful. Load is mainly Japanese.  I notice that given the choice at lunch the, Japanese ate western and the forangs ate Japanese.

Horrible Indian pax diagonally across the aisle and he didn’t get the Japanese meal and wanted one and complained to Valerie that I must be UA crew and he wasn’t happy.  Loved the way she went to get her print-out of everyone on board and she rather firmly informed him that I was a tres frequent passenger on UA and thus well known to many crews and had flown over 100,000 miles with them and that entitled me to special treatment … HA .. (well he probably flown that anyway over the years but I don’t think UA recognises that). Only one other crew member I knew from my UA/JFK days and she was a dingbat then and is a dingbat now ! Staggered off the a/c with 2 bottles of champagne, which will be used at my birthday party in Cambodia.

Saw some of me BA mates in JFK and up to the lounge to collect English newspapers and shock horror, these was none. Interviewed a cheerful I should think Mexican catering guy, who offered me anything as I was the only one there, BA having dept earlier and I said what I really wanted was the English newspaper and he rummaged around in the kitchen (at my req, as I have done that in other outposts of the BA empire and quite happily put together a once read paper on the floor of various BA kitchens, having no shame whatsoever) but to no avail. But then he thought they wud have in the Concorde Lounge, so I says I can’t go there but YOU can and off he trotted and back he comes with a nice LON Times and today’s too, so I was happy and he was overcome with being of service. He may have been watching Manuel I think as his role model. Then ran into an old BA Duty Manager l hadn’t seen in eons and she did this huge double take and let out a scream and pressed the flesh to the face and we did a catch up fast … all the time telling each other how GOOD we looked …which is of course all TOTALLY TRUE, as long as I don’t see a mirror. And Caro/BG, who did I see in the distance and I knew it was him even walking away from me, was the dreadful Spotty Captain Mike Bannister – almost square he is now… even his walk says “I am GOD Concorde…”

Had a nice mid flight jumpseat chat with Valerie who brought me up to date with the scene downstairs at UA/JFK … who is dead (several unfortunately, inc a real cheerful guy from Aids last week, which was v sad, as he was a bright light), but one or two who were mentally dead even in my day ! And so we progressed.

Now installed in the Red Carpet Club in Narita, (aka Tokyo Airport) which is HUGE (and as I counted no less than 10 UA widebodied a/c here, so it needs to be …) place full of the road warriors exchanging horror stones about failed upgrades and the like … BOY we frequent flyers are able to bitch almost as much as fit attendants (but we will never catch up with the f/a sisterhood for sure … they are all Olympic gold standard). It is all, of course HI TECH with EVERY seat wired to power up the laptop (it looks like they do a laptop check at the door and if u don’t have one, then u can’t be a REAL passenger and have to go elsewhere…. everyone pounding way like runners in a gym.

Feeling amazingly fit when it’s 0330 at home (and they were forecasting yet more snow … hee hee hee)… but the sun is setting and we shall have 7 hours in the dark and I fear the eyes will close… and then the wonderful clammy and polluted night air of Bangkok will be with me and it should be splendid. Back on very much home turf here, know exactly where to stand, so will be looked at by a ferocious Thai immigration lady with a lot of make up and a very spiffy pushed up peaked cap. I take the cheap regular taxi, called a ‘service taxi’, rather than the twice the price posh ones and I know the route so well, I could drive it myself. The lovely Regent Hotel is waiting. One of my top places to stay, as everything works perfectly and they remember me too, which is always good for the ego. It’s now midnight about 28 hours after leaving JFK so I shall collapse in to a crisply sheeted bed.

Have you been to the Seychelles ? Part 4. I meet the gang, have a private weep and end up smelling like the men’s cologne counter in Bloomingdales.

And so the plane arrived on time next day and there they were again, all saying ‘HOW did you get here?” as if their plane was the only mode of travel – sometimes, when I want to impress them with how easy we make it for them, then I do tell how I made it from a to b to c etc etc and their little eyes open in great wonder. Anyway they all went off to see the great Roman site/sight of Dougga and I went to the hotel with the bags (sometimes life does get as thrilling as this..) – gave me the rest of the day off as they were not back until after 6pm. So I went to the Bardo Museum. Somewhere I have visited many times, just to see the Roman mosaics. They are really staggering. And the great thing is rather than leaving them on the floor, they are mounted on the walls. That way you can just stand back and marvel at them. All Roman life comes to life in front of you, as they often really just show their daily life. People at wells, cooking, gardening – it is all there. Coupled with Libya, Tunisia has the best Roman mosaics in the world.

Then we lectured them and fed and watered them and told them to go to bed, not that they really needed to be told this, as we run them generally ragged. Up with the lark in the morning so I could repossess their bags as they were off to Carthage and the wonderful Bardo Museum to see the mosaics, and I told them they are in for a treat.

This meant I was free to sit in the hotel and have a wonderfully good time being teary eyed at the Queen Mother’s funeral, which of course was a great telly spectacular and if only the people who planned it could now get to work on the railways, then the UK would be a much better place.

Having mopped myself up from that, off I goes to the airport with the bags and find a very efficient handling agent who has actually produced destination bag tags for their next stop. (Catania in Sicily, if you are interested ) – yes Vera you should be able to find that. The two bag truck drivers are still there to make sure all is well and have obviously opened their tip envelopes, so I am suddenly the big hero and receive bristly double cheek kisses from both and expressions of undying gratitude and vire [‘entente cordiale USA/Tunisienne.

And then I jumps on Lufthansa – 2 rather grim hours, as I did not realize I had been given an aisle seat on the very back row of a 737 (merci bien Mademoiselle Tunisair check in agent) and there was a woman with an infant who had the window and I thought she was alone, so yes I would sit there and that way she could have the aisle and we could share the infant, when lo and behold, just as I am about to move, here comes huge husband who gets wedged between us and was, shall we say, somewhat less than fresh… and there was no window either, so I am claustrophobically jammed up against the wall with a large smelly man and a lusty infant ……..oy oy oy… there ortta be a law.. Anyway I survive and whiz through everything in FRA and run across to the Sheraton Hotel and a nice lady gives me a key in exchange for a credit card imprint and I am upstairs and have a quick room senvice hamburger, served by a sweet girl from Lithuania. I always ask when I hear a different accent – I thought she was Polish and she said they all do and I said well next time I think someone is Polish, I shall ask if they are from Lithuania and she thought that was a great idea and went off happy).

And next morning, having survived the elevator full of German Businessmen, all of whom have used a lot of expensive colognes and I feel I am now impregnated with them all). I run back across the bridge in to the terminal and on to the nice big Lufthansa A340 to Addis Ababa with a stop in Cairo (or Kairo as they write and make it sound much more forbidding). I’m using some of my half a million United Airlines miles to move to Business Class and manage to engineer a two seater to myself on the back row, which is my favorite position as it is usually quieter and I can watch them all at work.

More from there…….

Have you been to the Seychelles? Part 3. My return to Tunisia, where I had lived some 33 years before.

When I last left you, I had arrived in Tunisia – very much he coming home feel pour moi, as some of u may not know that It was my home in 1967 and 68 (and some of you were not even born then, which makes me feel slightly fossilized…). I came down on the v full and quite efficient Air France from Paris, with the usual selection of robust infants, but this is only a couple of hours, so I can survive. A man was sent to collect me, of similar vintage and quite amazed to hear that I had been there before and could identify landmarks, but not however the brand new huge French Carrefour hypemiarche, that apparently is putting all the small morn and pop traders out of business – we agreed it was sad but that is what the world is coming to etc etc. Sucking on teeth is such an international reaction.

Meanwhile, some 3 miles from the center of the city of Tunis, there are still flocks of goats and sheep and men plowing behind an ox, and others trotting along on the haunches of donkeys. Remember the innocent pleasures of donkey rides on the beach ?? – well we sat all wrong, as the middle of the back is just bouncy, whereas if you sit as far back as you can without actually sliding down its backside, then you will get a better ride. Just one of those useful/useless tips from foreign travels. But the biggest change is in the women, who are no longer all wearing the all-embracing white safsari and now you almost have to search for a woman, evidently an older one, draped in what looks like several yards of grubby white cotton muslin, the ends of which are grasped in her mouth.  

At the hotel there are messages to call our new agent so I dutifully do and he sounds v cheerful and speaks fluent English, which practically everyone in the hotel or tourism biz down here, plus German, who for years have been their biggest market. We agree to meet in the morning and start the process, so I falls in to bed and that is it.  

Morgen (sorry I’m writing this on LH and it is required to speak some German here…), he arrives and we hit it off very well. Tall for a Tunisian at over 6 ft, he had lived 9 years in Japan and consequently has now cornered the whole Japanese market here, as of course they like the idea they can phone from TYO and find someone to talk to – only prob is that they forget the time difference and call him in the middle of the night. He said he had never met a new client from a far-off land who greeted him and said a bit more in real Tunisian Arabic and out of range of any other ears, I practised my one remaining REALLY bad word and he nearly hit the floor laughing. I was established as one of us.

We get on so well that I am invited home to the equivalent of Sunday lunch and to meet the in-laws and various others, so after working on our program, we jump into the old Mercedes and a few minutes later I am shaking hands with various males and smiling at various females and trying out my now not quite so rusty Tunisian Arabic and it is a great ice breaker and I am obviously regarded as a semi, all around good bloke and installed at the oil cloth covered table for a real home made couscous and salade tunisienne and tagine (eat yr heart out Liz…but just to cheer you up, NO Gateau Nationale, which is what we used to call any Tunisian fancy desert, a cake covered in an icing of a garishness that would only probably be equaled in Vietnam or India) and in we tuck.  Nothing better than sitting at home with friendly locals and enjoying their every day food.  I see enough of fancy hotel buffets etc, so the oilcloth covered table is wonderfully  better.

The matriarch serves me and I think would probably have fed me had I asked. She looked v sweet and had the most huge soulful deep dark brown eyes and if she ever cried then I should think more than buckets would be needed. Various small children were paraded and encouraged to practice their English, but of course were struck dumb in terror at having a forang within the walls of the house, despite my efforts to look non-threatening and asking after their well being in Arabic (thus I spose the mindset being if he speaks bad Arabic, why do I have to make a fool of myself in English ?).

Only thing that gave me a hard time was the sort of milk/whey drink that was much used – kinda thin blue milk with blobs of almost butter on the top – didn’t taste nasty but just looked something like the cow had brought up – shut yr eyes and drink was the motto. It came in endless jugs and was obviously as much part of the meal as the food itself, so drink up and do have more…. Never realized that at home the Tunisians eat with spoon and fork (like the Thai) and you pulled the meat apart with them.  It is impossible to work out who the family members were, as there was no attempt at formal introductions. The women were v much on their own and afterwards, having had a mint tea and bikkie with the boys, we continued on our way, without even yelling goodbyes to the women in another room. They must think our social habits are v peculiar.

As there are now some newer and better hotels in Tunis that we should replace our current one with, we went on the obligatory tours of a couple, one of which I liked v much and which will probably be receiving us in November. Good to see that the Tunisian routine of the locals going out and sitting in hotels on Sundays is still practiced. When I lived in Hammamet, you just knew when it was Sunday as suddenly the hotels filled up with the posh (and often not-so) from Tunis who drove down for the day, just as a Londoner would go to Brighton or a New Yorker to Coney Island. 

Big difference was that the Brits went walkies on the shingle and had a nice cuppa, and looked forward to going back home again, whereas the Tunisians had had enough of sand and sun and instead lolled around in the hotel lobbies drinking endless cups of coffee and mint tea and stayed much later, small kids asleep on the floor.

More to come …

Have you been to the Seychelles? Part 2. Now in France and my old friend Bertrand’s sex life from 20 years ago is suddenly revealed…

Next day we drive north and take a look at a couple of potential places for visits next year and then I am back at the quietly swish chateau hotel near Sarlat that we shall use for three nights. This is a wonderful establishment, as it is an oasis of calm and friendly service combined. The staff seem genuinely pleased to see me again (well I was only here 6 months ago, so they didn’t have much time to forget and most of that time they were closed anyway). Anyway I am bien installe in the small room that I had last time (don’t these people realise that I am to be greatly sucked up to?).

GREAT BLANK SPACE HERE IN FRANCE – it went well – except I had too much totally delish white wine the first night (which I rarely drink, the white that is) and it had a tres debilitating effect on ma systeme, which was the Gulf War being re-fought in my stomach and was up from 0200 as unable to lie down (never knew the human frame could burp at such Olympic levels and even several A Zeltzer did not do the trick) so copped out of going out next day (which meant I missed one of the best lunches we offer .. boo hoo…). And it bloody rained most of the time too. But did manage to force un peu de foie gras down my throat next day and it is just luvly – I don’t think about the poor geese who are put on a high calorie diet to achieve this – I just enjoy the end result, which if it’s any consolation to them, is equally high calorie.

Now up on Air France Paris – Tunis – what another cozy flight, along with some nice Tunisian infants to add ethnic wails (and to tell the truth, they all sound the same – it’s the level of parental involvement that varies — here I am beginning to think that they are encouraging them…) Anyway, the purser lady is a wonderful specimen of the old school – comes down and uses full sentences, rather than the French equivalent of “chicken or fish?”   She practically goes into a full description for each person and thanks them profusely and smiles a lot and she is of course a dying breed. She also has a wonderfully French nose to go with it and it looks like it can be used most productively at the cheese counter wherever she lives, to sniff out the ripest and best Camembert. Just a pity the hot food they give us, in the huddled masses cabin, has been reduced to the much mass produced and then frozen variety. A few years of South African Airways catering taught me what that looks like and boy, this ain’t fresh. One giveaway (for those of you who may be remotely interested (and Vera you can skip this ) is that the foil is hermatically sealed (cos its going to be VERY deep frozen and we don’t want the contents drying out) and also it will have a mass of numbers and other symbols on the top, which are known only to a maker (and possibly God, but the latter is unlikely). Anyway, we shall survive and I asked for a second small bottle of nice Bordeaux and even indulged in a mini of Poire Williams, which is kinda close to nectar and v expensive to buy and AF still gives it to the masses, which is more than kind.

Had a fun ride to Bordeaux airport earlier with the agent guy, Bertrand and his assistant, who although as mentioned earlier, is a plain jane, she has great spirit and sense of humor, so now that it was all over, the plane has gone and they belong to one of my con-freres, so we can relax. He was off to a wedding reception tonight – old friends who had lived together for years and produced a family and  had suddenly decided on her 50th birthday that they would get married, so it was going to be a nice middle-aged bash. Funniest thing was that the conversation became tres risque, as he admitted that several of his old girlfriends from his wayward younger years would be there and when pressed, by his assistant and NOT me, as we are en france and they talk about such shocking matters so openly, it was she who delved deeper into his murky past.  He cheerfully admitted that he had probably over his formative years, slept with about twenty of the now middle aged women who would be there.  I just could not imagine having that conversation outside France and the nice thing is that it is all water under the bridge now, but we had a good time rigging him about it. He is anyway now a happily married 40 year old with 2 small kids that he dotes upon, as I had many conversations on the mobile phone and I even managed to do the ordeal of talking to a small slightly dumbstruck French 6 years old child, talking to a stranger in French and she pronounced me afterwards as being tout OK, so seems I have a 6 year old fan in Aix en Provence.

Driving to Bordeaux, we were in the middle of all the vineyards – just miles and miles of neatly pruned gnarled vines, each with one regulation shoot being allowed to aim along the wires towards its neighbor. Hard to imagine how wonderful they will look in 3 months’ time. In the small villages and towns en route, they had been hard at work pruning, which is almost too gentle a word, the plane trees in each market square. Seems they leave it until the spring weather is coming in and then go to work and really butcher these poor trees – they all look terribly unhappy and much abused and must be in a total state of shock -no fun being a tree in the main square en france. Just a tall mass of stumps. However that’s the way things are done around here and who am I to complain? The result will be nice round trees to give shade to the boules players later on.

And now I am in Tunisia. Back in my old stamping ground from 1967 and 68.  I am HOME !

Max, the cat in Mali, wants to have his say.

Hello,

My name is Max and I am a skinny cat in Mali.  I managed to find Mr Tim, as I know him and asked if it would be okay for me to send some messages to the world from somewhere you barely know and he said it was alright, as long as I don’t get political.   We don’t have politics where I live.  We are more concerned with staying alive.

I have been living in the courtyard of the deluxe Hotel Faguibine, Oulessebougou, Mali, for about three years, your time.  My mind is a little hazy on that, as I don’t have a calendar and for me, every day is the same.  I understand this is something you don’t do, as apparently you have names for when the sun comes up each day.  It does seem complicated and unnecessary to me.  A day is a day.  It starts, it ends.  I think that is enough.

And I understand you have fairly regular feeding times?  This does seem a little too difficult.  It makes time so constricted.  For me, I wake up and wander around and sit in the sun (if it is not the rainy season, like now) and if I find something to eat, then I eat it.   Some days there is not much and other days (like when I catch a mouse) then it is a gourmet day.  Easy come, easy go. I like it when the funny looking people come to stay as they tend to give me something to eat.  I have worked out how to sit still and look starved.  They are such suckers.

It seems I have developed the perfect life.  I have heard Mr Tim and others talking and it quite distressed me.  You have so many problems.  Things I don’t know about, but even so, I think I can give lessons to the two- legged people on living an easier life.  I shall have a think about it.  Right now, it is time for a doze in the sun.

Talk to you soon,

Love,

Max.

Have you been to the Seychelles? My first destination in 2002. Here it is. A kind of sweaty place and visitors from somewhere I would never have thought of …

Dear Readers,

Greetings from the sweaty and thundery heat of the Seychelles Islands. I have flown half way around the world just to see a mob through here on a one night stand. Seems mad sometimes.

But getting here is of course half the fun. I had kinda hoped that a 22:55 departure on a Tuesday night in early March, JFK to Paris would not be too popular, but I was v wrong. Everybody thought this a great time of night to travel, including many Africans with their usual bulging, overweight and generally already coming undone boxes, going through to places like Ouagadougou and Conakry. These are the things that drive formerly nice check in agents into becoming homicidal maniacs, so the girl who checked me in felt she had really got lucky. Mind you, she had never heard of the Seychelles and even when I put it vaguely on a world map, I don’t think she was any the wiser. I always like it when I have to tell them the three letter code for my bag…. inspires great confidence. On board, my seatmate was, of course, one of the Africans, but at least in a suit and not overflowing robes and he had washed recently, so you start to count your blessings. His French was somewhat impenetrable and somewhere down the line he seemed to think I was going to Amsterdam and where was that, and I told him and then he asked if Holland was part of France, so I kinda gave up, as murder may have been on the horizon.

Anyway, we made it into a very sunny Paree at midday, and as I had hours to kill, I went through into the outside world and decided that as I had only picked at the dinner on the plane, I would now have lunch, so am bien installe in the restau. as the French with their love for abbreviations, would say and I have a nice meal and half a bottle of wine and am feeling less like someone who was wondering what had happened to last night. Then the lady says I gotta leave, not because I am spinning out my time too much, but cos the police have an unclaimed bag outside and we all have to be removed, so out we all troop (she having made me pay the bill in case I don’t return. Money before safety! ).  I wander around the terminal for 20 mins while we are made safe. Help an African lady understand that the arrivals and departures screens are NOT the same and if she is meeting her mate from Dakar, then the arrivals is a better bet and I find the ETA of the flight and she needs to go over there and we get that sorted out and merci infiniment. I don’t know why. I must have that sort of face, Strangers are always asking me directions in airports, usually for the toilets. My rule of thumb is look for the bars and restaurants and they are probably over there.

Then back for my petit cafe … well it helped to kill the time. And several hours later we all troop on to Air Seychelles, which is also packed to the rafters, but we leave exactly to the minute for the 9 and half hour flight to the tropics. My seatmate is a returning Seychelloise, living in the USA, so in the same condition as me and she soon passes out and I pop a pill and do likewise. And before we know it, the sun is up and so are we and we swoop down across the coral seas and waving palms and the wheels nearly kiss the water and smoothly, so it is Bienvenue aux Seychelles. Swampy 30C degree heat outside and the immigration persons seem to be even slower than ever and we stand in gloriously non a/c lines, while they decide our fate. They have a new immigration stamp ( I know how fascinated you are probably not by these small details) but now instead of the old triangular plonk on the passport, you have the outline of the coco de mer, which is the endemic palm tree here and whose enormous nuts are very reminiscent of the female pelvis, so now I have a semi-naughty stamp in my pp…. just think what other countries could do to spruce up their image ….prizes may be awarded for the best suggestions received, on post cards please…

At the Hotel Meridien, many of the same faces are there and although I haven’t been for a couple of years, I’m greeted like an old friend – strange, cos I usually have to knock them into shape a bit and get tough. This is a resort type of hotel, therefore quite a long way from the more upmarket pads we stay in and sometimes I do feel we could do better and try harder and it becomes my job, but of course it doesn’t last and I wonder why I bother !!

What I notice straight away is a new clientele, as I hear the sound and see the look and yes, all Tel Aviv is here. Discover they have a charter every week and it has been doing v nicely thank you, but the hotel does admit that they are a work out. Some of the females are more mutton dressed as lamb than we have seen in a long day and you wish they had a sensible best friend, not of the same ilk, who went shopping with them and told them that NO, that is really more for your fifteen year old daughter darling, as the sights are now making sore eyes. One extreme specimen who is convinced she is B Spears or some other pop idol, was wearing a tight white outfit (though tight is only half as tight as the thing really was – clearly no knickers). But it had an abstract, sorta Andy Warhol crossed with Jackson Pollock splattered brown spots/splurges design, some of which came wonderfully out of the seat of the pants and went down the back of her legs – I kid thee not !!!! Her mate had spangled jeans of the most distressed variety and platform pushers/mules in blue suede with more rhinestones – they thought they were really HOT and if someone had thrown a bucket of water over them, it wudda been only to prevent the crotch friction from self-combusting and no other reason.  If you know the British TV show Absolutely Fabulous, well these were Patsy and Edina on their hols.

Anyway, it’s the rainy season here so that means the world most huggest cumulus clouds build during the day and then let go with a force of atomic proportion – real Hollywood rain here, no wimpy little showers permitted. Even wakes you up at night, as it sounded like a train was coming through my room. But I meet with the necessary people and we do it all in French.  They are quite impressed, but it is good practice – Creole, the lingua franca, is a nasty hard sort of noise and sounds like rather drunken French, spoken with a curious regional accent.

And on Easter Saturday my plane arrives, some 20 mins early, from Kathmandu and I meet several old friends pax and a good staff and we get ourselves organised and the party starts. The poor buggers are only here for one night and in order for them to pop over to Praslin Island, a 15 min flight away on the Twin Otters of Air Seychelles, those who are really keen have to rise and shine for an 0430 breakfast – we make people pay through the nose to do things that under normal circumstance they would NEVER do !! I am so paranoid that the hotel will not be able to do a breakfast that early, that I hardly sleep (having had several libations while catching up with the staff at an overpriced Croele Barbecue dinner). I am in bed at 2300 and awake at 0300 – turn on the telly and hear about the death of the Queen Mother, who has been there all my life, which is universally sad and just can’t think of anyone who has ever been more greatly loved. Anyway, onwards and upwards and miracle of miracles the breakfast is all there and a woman is scrambling eggs as if she was feeding the troops in Afghanistan – have to tell there that will only be about 30 takers and don’t overdo it, s’il vous plait. We get these keen types off to the airport and then there are those who want to go to church, it’s Easter Sunday, which we have fortunately thought about and it has to be Catholic whether you like it or not, so fueled by more eggs, off they go and so do I, as I have a 0915 flight to Paris and on to London, on which I am now writing (that is on the first sector), which is almost 10 hours, as CDG LHR there is hardly time to blink let alone write. The flight is 100% occupe and we are all being generously entertained by 16 months old Gustavus James, who is a bundle of energy and enjoying himself enormously by being toujours actif – and if he has a wail, then his dear papa parades him around the plane so that even those on the back rows are aware of his vocal prowess !!! Oy oy oy – he is however a stunner to look at and has a great grin and my seatmate has pronounced him to be ‘tres sage’ already, so no doubt a great future will be in store. His parents look whacked. And so were we. He has a clone a few rows back too, so sometimes we have solos and sometimes duets – makes Crusty Old Batchelors start planning murder.

Anyway in Paris I walk the change between terminals to stretch the legs and jump on the AF again for the hop to LHR and stand and stand at the baggage carousel and NO bag – bugger bugger, esp. as I was almost 2 hours in Paris, so shame on AF.

Go off to the Berkeley Hotel downtown which we are using for our next departure. Never even been through the front door before (and even discovered it wasn’t even where I thought it was either, so don’t ask me for directions in London…), but all is well and the room is big and a bit Laura Ashley on speed and I have a soak in a deep bath with a vest Victorian sort of plunger rather than a common or garden rubber plug. Next morning AF calls to say they have the bag, which was doubly good news as they were my wake up call too, so I rush downstairs in my sweaty clothes and we have our staff meeting and go over the next program minute by minute. This is Human Odyssey, kinda History of Man-type of thing. Lots to talk about and fine tune, but that’s the only way for these programs to work as well as we are known for. The punters would be amazed how much hard work and detail goes in to making it all look so easy. And before we know it, I’m back at Heathrow, still in the same clothes (well I’m going to France after all, and we are not always do wonderfully fresh there) and a quick blast of Givenchy Gentlemen from the duty free shop spritzer covers a whole host of other less pleasant odors. Check agent lets me off my excess bag weight (as I’m now carrying supplies for the trip – I made sure to leave on the AF Rush Tag, to show that they had buggered me up the day before and the plan worked…).

And in a flash (well, a 90 minute one) I am in Toulouse and me ole mate Bertrand from our French ground handlers is there, with a plain jane girl called Cecile and we go bugger off downtown and although it is now near midnight French time, they have not eaten, so we go to a restaurant, which is hopping and they have le diner and I have a big strong drink and we catch up and laugh a lot. The fact that I am dead on my feet is not mentioned. There was a French family on the plane in the row ahead with two teenage girls, both of whom were reading The Times from cover to cover, which was a bit mind boggling – how many London teens could read the Le Monde, I wondered? Or even want to?